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Violence, Misrecognition, and Place: Legal Envelopment and Colonial Governmentality in the Upper Skeena River, British Columbia, 1888

Author(s): Matthew P Unger

This paper is concerned with exploring legal atmospheres during colonial expansionism and the early period of confederation of British Columbia. By describing the theatrical and performative aspects of legal colonialism, the archival documents from this tim...

Article GUID: 38726046

Winter's Topography, Law, and the Colonial Legal Imaginary in British Columbia

Author(s): Matthew P Unger

This article examines how images of nature, weather, and topography disclose a politics of recognition (who is visible/invisible) invested in a burgeoning criminal justice milieu, where punishment of wrongdoing became increasingly racialized in British Colu...

Article GUID: 37885918


Title:Winter's Topography, Law, and the Colonial Legal Imaginary in British Columbia
Authors:Matthew P Unger
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37885918/
DOI:10.1177/12063312211014033
Category:
PMID:37885918
Dept Affiliation: CONCORDIA
1 Department of Sociology & Anthropology, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada.

Description:

This article examines how images of nature, weather, and topography disclose a politics of recognition (who is visible/invisible) invested in a burgeoning criminal justice milieu, where punishment of wrongdoing became increasingly racialized in British Columbia during the early confederation period of Canada's history. Drawing from archived court documents and colonial writing, it examines dominant environmental metaphors and tropes that structured this politics of recognition within the colonial legal imaginary. I argue that images and understandings of topography, nature, weather, and seasons shaped the background enactment of law in early Canadian lawmaking practices. By examining these natural tropes, this article seeks to understand the contours of a contextually specific colonial legal imaginary as a vital component for entry into the criminal justice system. This colonial legal imaginary predisposes certain groups, and particularly Indigenous peoples, as subject to the constraining power of law, thereby fueling the growth of crime control industries over the last 150 years.